How To Start a Home Care Business

The idea of starting a home care business differs greatly from actually taking action to get an agency opened and running. Writing this post comes the presumption the idea of starting a business has grown to where you’d like to actually learn how to start your dream.

Before the action steps to start a home care agency are discussed, let’s cover a topic that many to-be entrepreneurs don’t think about: Evaluation of your strengths and weaknesses by asking some serious questions about yourself. Take a step back and truly consider the following questions, being very honest with yourself and the answers.

First – Ask The Tough Questions About Yourself
(before jumping feet first into building the business)

A. Are you a go-getter and self-disciplined?

How well do you manage your time? It’s up to you to make things happen. You’ll need to organize and prioritize your time to create projects, schedule appointments, follow up and delegate tasks. Your phrase each day must become “If it is going to be, it’s up to me!”

B. Are you a people person?

In business, especially home care, people skills are a must. Starting a home care company means establishing and growing relationships with banks, lawyers, employees, doctors, nurses, vendors, accountants, clients and their families. Can you deal with a hard to please client? How about unruly employees or pushy vendors?

C. Do you have the time, energy, focus and money?

To start a home care business (or any business) requires a significant amount of investment! It demands your time, focus, energy, finances and more. You’ll be sacrificing time and focus on family to get it launched, at least in the first 6 to 12 months until you have it set up correctly.

D. Are You Business Minded?

Do you have a general understanding of business? Are you financially inclined enough to regularly review financial reports. You’ll need to understand balance sheets, cash flow statements, Profit & Loss Statements and various other reports. If numbers aren’t your forte, some of it can be hired out. However, your ability to review, understand and act on financial reports can make or break your business.

E. Are you organized?

The ability to plan and organize will save you tremendous amounts of time, headaches and money as your business grows. Organized systems for scheduling yourself and staff, finances, daily operations and inventory are essential to smooth operations.

F. Are you motivated?

After you’ve put in 12 to 16 hour days and the excitements of a new business owner wears off, can you maintain the motivation necessary to follow through on your goals and plans? Burnout is a major contributor to businesses failing; self-motivation will be a strong factor in surviving burnout and slow times.

G. Is your family prepared for your commitment?

Does your family understand how they will be affected? Do you understand the time away? Support and understanding from your family will be essential as you launch your business and work to make it profitable. Your business will require much of your time and focus. It may mean time away from events and functions that are otherwise tradition. You may also experience financial hardships for a few months in the beginning and depending on the effort and outside factors – it could mean lean times for a year or more.

H. Do you have any of the personality traits that can help?

Having any of these traits are not pre-requisite, however, they do lend themselves greatly to business owners in the home care profession.

Ability to build relationships; a network of individuals, institutions and industry leaders related to care.

Being a people person who is able to manage a growing staff.

A good decision maker.

Once you’ve seriously considered the fore mentioned questions and still feel the home care industry is right for you – then it’s time to take action to start a home care business.

Step 1 – Understand the Home Care Industry

How well do you know and understand the home care industry? The senior care industry or providing care for people? If you’re going to enter this industry, you want to know and understand what you’re getting into. We won’t discuss the demographics in detail as you’ll learn best by doing the research yourself. My book Home Care How To goes into great detail about the industry. For now, here’s the major areas you should learn about:

Step 3 – Research, Analyze and Define Your Market

Now that you understand what the industry is about and the options available, it’s time to learn about your own market area, where you plan to do business and it’s surrounding areas. AKA, Market Analysis.

Define your geographical location, size and population as well as coverage area.

Step 4 – Create Your Business Plan

Without a home care business plan, you have no target. Without a target – where do you plan to hit? The business plan doesn’t have to designed to submit to Sequoia Venture Capital Investors, however it should be detailed enough that anyone who does read it can clearly see you’ve thought it through.

The business plan includes your financial details and projections. Many new business owners miss this most important step. Without laying the plan to your financials, your chances of failure are doubled. The reason is simple – by not managing the limited funds you are undoubtedly working with, they will be depleted quicker than you anticipate and your sales may not be where they need to be for the business to be self sustaining (i/e: profitable).

Step 5 – Set Up Your Business

Here’s where the rubber meets the road. With your well thought out plan in place, it’s time to take action and start putting the pieces together. Many of these pieces can and should come together about the same time so you’ll find yourself very busy.

The summary below outlines the major action steps:

Choose your business name

Corporate business name search

Verify trademarks

Set up the legal entity

Obtain a Fictitious Business Name Search

Obtain business EIN

Check Domain Names for website

Create a logo

Complete State licensure requirements

Set up your office

Create marketing paraphernalia

Step 6 – Prepare Operational Systems

Setting your business up with systems is paramount to the foundation you’ll be laying down. Not doing so and you could run yourself crazy. Every task your business requires to operate should have a procedure created for it. Everything from your filing system to your telephone answering script. From time tracking to invoicing, payroll to financial reporting, scheduling to client retention. You’ll also need forms to help make these systems run smoothly. All the forms you need are available as a Member of Home Care How To.

Step 7 – Hiring Home Care Staff

As you prepare to hire caregivers who will care for your clients, it’s important you have a clear picture of what kind of employees to hire. What are the required qualifications you will have? How will you attract them to your company? Prepare for the applications coming in and how you’ll review them. Having created the processes already, it’s time to screen and interview them, then background check the qualified candidates before offering the jobs.

Once hired, caregivers need to be trained to your company’s operational standards and way of doing things. Then, prepare to manage them.

Step 8 – Signing Clients

One of the most exciting milestone in starting a home care business is signing your first client! Then five and ten. Obtaining the first few clients is simple for some and can present challenges for others.

Remember the character trait of being able to build relationships? Networking, meeting people and establishing relationships within the industry at the same time as carrying out the previous three steps helps enormously to signing your first clients. Home Care How To guides you in how to do this.

Step 9 – Marketing Home Care Services

After the excitement wears away from signing the first few clients, realize that your journey has just begun. To grow the company requires marketing the company’s home care services and not doing so, the company won’t survive.

How to market home care services requires far more than a paragraph or blog posting. If you’ve gotten this far in your home care business development – you’ve probably done it with more guidance than this article. Take your business to the next level and learn How to Market Your Home Care Business. You’ll find that discussed in more detail in Home Care How To – The Guide to Starting Your Home Care Business.